“Low Bridge, Everybody Down.”-Erie Canal Song

Music doesn’t lie. If there is something to be changed in thisworld, then it can only happen through music.” – Jimi Hendrix

A little history for this Saturday, Oct. 26th: On this day in 1825,  The Erie Canal opened up in NYS. The Erie Canal used to be studied in elementary school and popped up on history exams. I always loved the song and shared it with my students. Through music we learned English, History, Map Skills, Tolerance, Social Justice…I know, I know, I”ve written this before!  Hey, maybe there are some new readers out there so pardon me for repetition. Teachers repeat…habit of the trade!!!  

“The Erie Canal opened up western New York, and much of the Midwest, to settlement and trade. Before the canal, it cost between $90 and $125 to ship a ton of cargo from Buffalo to New York City; after the canal’s completion, that same ton cost just $4. Within the first year, 2,000 boats, 9,000 horses, and 8,000 men were working to transport cargo on the canal.”The Writer’s Almanac with Garrison Keillor

Music brings history alive and I have always promoted its use in the classroom and tried to encourage teachers to sing to and with their students and that you didn’t need a good voice!!!  Just your enthusiasm for the music was enough to inspire students…believe me, I’ve sang flat many a time! 

“I’ve got an old mule and her name is Sal

Fifteen years on the Erie Canal

She’s a good old worker and a good old pal

Fifteen years on the Erie Canal

We’ve hauled some barges in our day

Filled with lumber, coal, and hay

And every inch of the way we know

From Albany to Buffalo

Chorus:

Low bridge, everybody down

Low bridge for we’re coming to a town

And you’ll always know your neighbor

And you’ll always know your pal

If you’ve ever navigated on the Erie Canal”-Thomas S. Allen

 

 

Al Aronowitz, A Remembered Rock (and so much more) Journalist

“A highly respected and influential writer, Aronowitz is recognized for inspiring many, including Hunter S. Thompson. He counted among his close friends Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg, George Harrison, Miles Davis, Jerry Garcia and Bob Dylan, to name a few. At the time of his death, Al was working on a new book, “Mick and Miles,” detailing how he brought Mick Jagger and Miles Davis together.”blacklistedjournalist

In the middle of the night, listening to “BAI on the radio, someone was sharing a great “poem” by a writer whose name I immediately recognized: Al Aronowitz. I loved reading his columns in the 60s and 70s in the Village Voice, The NY Post and other newspapers and magazines. This morning I google the poem to share with you since it is the month of August and also discovered that Aronowitz died in the month of August in 2005.

“AlAronowitz was often described as “the godfather of rock journalism”. His POP SCENE column in the NEW YORK POST turned him into one of the most powerful rock journalists in the world. Those columns – plus his writings in THE SATURDAY EVENING POST, THE VILLAGE VOICE and many other publications – set the tone for all subsequent coverage of rock and roll. He collected some of his unpublished manuscripts in THE BLACKLISTED MASTERPIECES OF AL ARONOWITZ. As the man who introduced Allen Ginsberg to Bob Dylan, Bob Dylan to the Beatles, and the Beatles to marijuana, Al was known to boast that “the ’60s wouldn’t have been the same without me”.  rock’sbackpages

The poem brings back a lot of great memories for me; I recognize all of the names/places mentioned…been to the clubs/festivals, saw the performers. Even if some of the names and places aren’t familiar to you, it’s a great piece of writing, especially listening to it being read aloud. There’s a lot of history in this here blues poem!

August Blues by Al Aronowitz

 August is the month when wars start. It’s when the water dries up and the spirit begins to wither. Insomniacs pull down their shades and lock themselves in their rooms in August. Lifelong friends have fist fights. People feel like they’re going to burst. Sometimes they do.

 World War I started in August, or just about. The Austro-Hungarian Army began bombarding Belgrade on July 29, 1914, not quite August, but then August sometimes begins early. World War II didn’t quite start in August either. A German pocket battleship anchored alongside the harbor fortifications while on a good will call to the Polish port of Gdynia let loose with a broadside at dawn of Sept. 1, 1939, but then August sometimes lasts for weeks after you’ve ripped it off the calendar. It drags on and on like some kind of insanity that can only be snapped away by the first crisp shock of autumn.

 The sailing ships used to get becalmed in August. August is when dogs go mad. American Nazi Party leader George Lincoln Rockwell was assassinated by one of his own subordinates in August. This is the month when the sale of tranquilizers goes up. Corporate executives get their heads chopped off. Groups break up. Organizations fizzle out. August is when you start seeing things. The stars fall in August. You wake to days with the feeling you’ve already lived through them. People pass out in the street and on airplanes. The moon talks to you. August is the month of visions.

 My father died in August. It was years ago. We were all standing around him when he gasped his last breath, emaciated on a bed of cancer. My three sisters and I each kissed him on the face and cried. I do not mean to say that August has cornered the market on tragedy. You can have fun in August; people die all year round. Shall I tell you about the other night in Central Park, the sky lit by a sliver of a moon, the weather air-conditioned by the first cool, abortive breath of the fall? August may end early this year.

 On the park drive, bikers stood around in knots, talking about good times, holding onto their handlebars like nannies gossiping while little kids tugged at their hands. It was a better place to meet than at some bar. Outside the Schaefer Music Festival at the Wollman Rink, couples were stretched out on the grass, some on blankets. Others walked hand-in-hand. Bootleggers hawked albums like dealers selling drugs at some pop festival. There were pretzel pushcarts and ices pushcarts and a quiet carnival feeling of the kind of romance you see in pictures of some park in Paris on a gay, colorful night.

 Inside the rink, the dusk darkened slowly while Carly Simon sang her hits in the skyscraper voice, as big and strong as her New York City. Backstage, promoter Ron Delsener was all dressed up for a Friar’s Club meeting. Ron had been hit early August. The last week in July, one of his security men had been stabbed to death at Ron’s Who concert at Forest Hills. A day or so later, one of the backstage crew at Madison Square Garden had fallen to his death while hanging rigging for Ron’s Steve Stills show. Ron himself had fallen sick the night of the show, put to bed by an inner-ear infection. August is when unexplainable fevers come. Nagging aches and mysterious pains visit your body. August has to be suffered.

 The night was gentle. There was no strain. I laughed out loud when David Steinberg told about how God put a fly in Jezebel’s head to buzz as a punishment every time she lusted after a man. Jezebel liked the buzzing. The first girl I ever made it with was born in August. We used to break up just in time for her birthday every year. August is when the ocean dizzies you. August is when you find yourself drowning in your own head.

 I went broke and lost my house in August some five years ago. It was almost August when Charles Whitman climbed to the top of the University of Texas tower and shot down forty-nine people, killing seventeen, sniping at random through the ramparts. August is when Mount Vesuvius buried Pompeii. The first atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima in August. August is when Congress first passed the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution. Women turn into witches in August. I remember once I refused to buy a flower from an old lady selling them in the Nite Owl on Third Street. I was managing a group called the Myddle Class then, and they were onstage. The old lady gave me a dirty look and our sound system immediately went dead.

 I suppose it has to do with the sun and the heat and the planets and the stars. Brian Epstein died in August. So did Jimi Hendrix and Janis Joplin, although their August stretched through an Indian summer. It’s no accident the Jewish New Year begins then. August sometimes lasts until the sound of the ram’s horn. People move in September. School starts. Somehow the pulse revives. People begin to think about lighting fires for winter. Finally, August lets go like the leaves from the trees. And the weirdness ends.”

 Here’s Carly Simon at the Schaefer Music Festival in Central Park:

 I think Al Aronowitz would appreciate this fact that today, August 9th, in 1964, “Bob Dylan and Joan Baez share the stage for the first time, singing “With God On Our Side” at the Newport Folk Festival.” oldies.about.com

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

“God Bless the Child That’s Got His Own”-Billie Holiday and Arthur Herzog, Jr.

“Music doesn’t lie. If there is something to be changed in this world, then it can only happen through music. ”Jimi Hendrix

It’s funny where you’ll hear good music sometimes. There I was, waiting to see the Ear, Nose and Throat doctor, when on the waiting room’s TV screen, a great, great version of “God Bless the Child” appeared and put a smile on my face. It was Tony Bennett and Billie Holiday…the editing was fantastic!  You could just feel the respect and admiration Tony Bennett has/had for Lady Day!  In 1997, Bennett put out a tribute album to Holiday, Tony Bennett on Holiday, but I have no idea when the video was made, obviously years later. For those of you who may not know, Mr. Bennett was very vocal during the Civil Rights Movement, marching alongside Dr. King. He is a philanthropist and just a good guy all around.  

“Holiday (born Eleanora Fagan) grew up in jazz talent-rich Baltimore in the 1920s. As a young teenager, Holiday served the beginning part of her so-called “apprenticeship” by singing along with records by Bessie Smith or Louis Armstrong in after-hours jazz clubs. When Holiday’s mother, Sadie Fagan, moved to New York in search of a better job, Billie eventually went with her. She made her true singing debut in obscure Harlem nightclubs and borrowed her professional name – Billie Holiday – from screen star Billie Dove. Although she never underwent any technical training and never even so much as learned how to read music, Holiday quickly became an active participant in what was then one of the most vibrant jazz scenes in the country.”Billie Holiday Official Site

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

“Wild Thing, You Make My Heart Sing” for Marvelous Monday

 

The Troggs released Wild Thing 47 years ago today!  I was 13 years old. Recently, the lead singer, Reg Presley died this past February.  Wild Thing was a very simple song with just a few chords, but it had its impact on rock’n roll and surely was an inspiration for garage bands and punk rock bands.  Also, who can forget

Jimi Hendrix’s interpretation of Wild Thing? We’ve heard this classic song included on the soundtrack of several movies and as the background music for commercials. It continues to live on this Marvelous Monday.

Music and Poetry; Poetry and Music

Poetry is the music of the soul, and, above all, of great and feeling souls.”-Voltaire

“Music doesn’t lie. If there is something to be changed in this world, then it can only happen through music.” – Jimi Hendrix

For National Poetry Month, I’d like to remind some of us and introduce to some of us to lyrics my generation clung to; hungered for; breathed in as if our lives depended on it. These lyrics spoke of our times, disappointments, outrages, anger, frustration, love, empathy and compassion and innumerable emotions. If you have time, click onto the highlights to view all of the lyrics; or see the performer in action or read about the performer. There are countless lyrics/poems I could’ve included, but just thought this sampler of 4 would do the trick…inspire!

 Phil Ochs,What’s That I Hear Now?” (My students used to perform this song in its entirety in the elementary school auditorium!)

“What’s that I hear now ringing in my ear

I’ve heard that sound before

What’s that I hear now ringing in my ear

I hear it more and more

It’s the sound of freedom calling

Ringing up to the sky

It’s the sound of the old ways falling

You can hear it if you try

You can hear it if you try”

Bob Dylan, “Masters of War

Come you masters of war

You that build all the guns

You that build the death planes

You that build the big bombs

You that hide behind walls

You that hide behind desks

I just want you to know

I can see through your masks

Civil Rights Song, “Ain’t Gonna Let Nobody Turn Me ‘Round” (Oh my students loved performing this song…we’d even sing it very hush-hush in the hallway!)

Ain’t gonna let nobody turn me ‘round,

Turn me round, turn me ‘round.

Ain’t gonna let nobody, turn me ‘round.

I’m gonna keep on a-walkin’;, keep on a-talkin’,

Walkin’ into freedom land.”

Pete Seeger’s (You can just listen to Pete Singing, but not see him performing.)

 “My Rainbow Race

“One blue sky above us

One ocean lapping all our shore

One earth so green and round

Who could ask for more

And because I love you

I’ll give it one more try

To show my rainbow race

It’s too soon to die.”